The engine is coming together nicely. Such a great model in itself. Looking forward to seeing it come to fruition, its a beautiful piece. Looking forward to your next pics.
I think I have everything roughed in color-wise. Once it's together, I can tune the weathering. Frankly I have no clue what I'm doing, but I know God loves a trier.
Does a modeler start with bag number 1 of sticks. When I called Brett, I received another school marm lecture. Brett, better delete! You might lose 47 cents!
I concur, Brett's manuals are the finest examples of fine scale modeling instructions and resource ever produced in the hobby...period! I read the manual cover to cover at least twice before I lift a finger on the build. A spiral bound pack of modeling motivation! I religiously follow the manual from start to finish and have found the instructions impecable for completeness and ease of replicating what I'm reading to what I'm doing. I always embrace the "bag of sticks" as the most important step in a quality build...I love working up the wood!...Deep breath and carry on...
Phil, in the part of northern Maine where I live, we have a phenomena called humor. We also joke around and tease our friends. This is a hobby to me. That means I do it to get away from the bullshite of the everyday grind. I was horsing around with Brett and I'm sure he knows it, although I notice many of you are VERY serious about all this. Anyway, cheers and good modeling! I'll just start with bag one and see what happens. I hate reading instructions.
And Phil, what makes you the person who decides what is correct behavior on this forum? And don't you find it a bit unfair to demean my behavior in front of everyone? Do you think I like being segregated and pointed at with an authoritative finger?
HELP! Okay, I have a major snag and really need your guys input. In New England, during that construction era (1900s) there would unlikely be knots in the wood. Even white pine was NOT the white pine of today. We live in a 7k foot Victorian. There are NO knots anywhere. Not in the basement joists, beams, etc., which are locust. The clapboards are quarter sawn. NO knots. You buy a clapboard today, Christ you need a gallon of Bin just to cover the knots. Your thoughts please.
Engine Number 9, I'm fully aware this is Brett's business site and attempt to respect it as such, but as I said, my nature as a Mainrer is to horse around. I intend NO ill will. I'm actually not that terrible of a guy. Pretty bad but not terrible. And I began listening to Coltraine in 1970. I actually heard many of the greats like Ornette Coleman, Archie Shepp, Julius Hemphill, etc. live in small coffee houses. That was the music of my teen years.
One last note: I am well aware of board and batten siding, but I'm talking just running boards vertically butted side by side. I talked to my buddy Greg. The reason this was done was so nothing collects in the seam, it just runs off. I never understood that. Now I know, so I assume that is why Brett ran the boards vertically. True?
Comments
Sorry, bud. Photo will not post.
Later, Dave S. Tucson, AZ
Looking forward to your next pics.
Karl.A
Do I look ready?
I take out my manuals from the kits periodically and read them just because they are such great reads and full of great information.
Frank
Engine Number 9, I'm fully aware this is Brett's business site and attempt to respect it as such, but as I said, my nature as a Mainrer is to horse around. I intend NO ill will. I'm actually not that terrible of a guy. Pretty bad but not terrible. And I began listening to Coltraine in 1970. I actually heard many of the greats like Ornette Coleman, Archie Shepp, Julius Hemphill, etc. live in small coffee houses. That was the music of my teen years.